Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from War from.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Everywhere, USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Faylon.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Oh, we're letting the guitars roll.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Building to a broad casting crescendo on Fox Across America
with Jimmy Failo. We got Kennedy coming up, We got
Katrina Campen's coming up, and Paula.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Scanlon is going to be here.
Speaker 3 (00:39):
And it is Ladies Night, the good old fashioned ladies,
the ones that don't have wieners.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
You know what I'm saying? What the hell did you say?
Eight at eight seven and eight nine, nine one zero.
If you want to be a part of the show.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
We had a lot of fun in the first hour
talking about this preposterous claim that the American Eagle ad
starring Sydney Sweeney is some type of Nazi coding to eugenics.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
So crazy someplace else. We're all stocked up here.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
They're gonna keep selling the crazy, but we're gonna have
some cold, sobering truth for you in this hour eight
at eight seven, eight nine nine one zero. As we
get underway. The show, which we always tell you, is
a place that operates free of ideological barriers. We do
not care who you vote for. Whether or you agree
(01:25):
with us, it does doesn't matter.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
I don't care where you come from. I don't care
what color you are.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
How's much, y'all? I don't care.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
I gum yare no ma'am, say it all the time.
It could be a Republican, you could be a Democrat.
Just don't be a That is all. So as you
roll on a couple of good things, let me plan
for you really quick, because the one thing you need
to know about my show is I'm always processing issues
through the lens of how does it affect us? Not
will it help the Republicans get elected other Democrats, cause
(01:53):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
It's not my job.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
My job is to look at what's happening in Washington,
what's happening in news, and translated into plain English for
the rest of us, so we understand how our lives
will be impacted. Okay, here's the good news about how
our life has been impacted. Okay. GDP grew quicker than expected.
Take it away see NBC clibate.
Speaker 4 (02:16):
A three percent of three percent better than expected.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
That would be the highest level since the third.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
Quarter of twenty four, when it was up three point
one percent on the consumption side, up one point four,
very close to estimates. Up one point four would be
the best since the last quarter.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
Of twenty four.
Speaker 3 (02:36):
So that's them telling us the economy is up beyond expectations.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Okay, that's actually really good news.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Here, Cheryl CASONI saying the same thing Clip seven again, GDP, this.
Speaker 5 (02:48):
Is the first read of the second quarter coming in
at three percent.
Speaker 6 (02:52):
That is better than expected two point four percent.
Speaker 5 (02:55):
I want to bring it Adam Johnson Marcus are certainly
watching this right.
Speaker 7 (02:58):
Yeah, goldilots, because I would add to that, Cheryl, that
the GDP price index was only two percent and the
expectation was.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
Two point two.
Speaker 7 (03:06):
In other words, we have an economy growing at what
you say, three percent, we have inflation at two percent.
That's the best of both worlds. So I'm very positive
on that report, at least in the moment.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
Did you hear that, by the way, the economy soaring
under Donald Trump, so much.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
So that Axios, which Axios.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
Which is not exactly mar Lago monthly, Axios actually.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Giving Trump credit.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
And saying that the trade deal was a win for
the American people. Here it is Axios, President Trump is
winning the global trade battle with a series of deals
that are resulting so far in big concessions by major partners,
new revenue for the federal government, and minimal upset to
the US economy or markets.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Let's continue.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
Tariff revenue is rolling in twenty seven billion dollars last
month alone, supporting the White House's contention that import taxes
are on track to become a meaningful revenue source that
lowers the budget deficit. You know what that means, right,
It means the tariffs are working and all the critics
(04:28):
were wrong. I hope you like this song, folks. Okay,
you know who doesn't like this song? Are you ready
for it? A guy by the name of Chuck Schumer.
Chuck Schumer's a clown, I tweeted this earlier.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Democrats are so upset with this good economic news because
it means Trump is winning. In the Democratic Party, the
politics are more important than the people. Do you understand
If the GDP grows beyond expectations, if hiring beats expectations
by one hundred thousand jobs every month of Trump's presidency,
(05:09):
if American born workers have gotten ninety five percent of
those jobs created, this is a huge win for American
tax paying citizens. The Republican base, the Democratic base. Are
people in this country illegally?
Speaker 1 (05:28):
What plans?
Speaker 3 (05:28):
Titius?
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (05:31):
Democrats voted against the Big Beautiful Bill, which got rid
of a tax on tips. Imagine if you're a single
mom or you're a poor family and you're waiting tables
to make ends meet after you get done work in
your full time job. Imagine hearing that there'll be no
more tax on tips and someone trying to tell you
that was a bad thing. There's no world where you could.
(05:53):
But the Democrats fought against something that was very, very popular.
No tax on tips is like the Sydney Sweet. Everybody
likes hot girls and funny commercials. The idea that you're
gonna be like no, no, no, that's that boobs are bad insanity,
actual clinical insanity. What they've done, but you did. Chuck
Schumer comes in today after hearing the good news and says, oh,
(06:14):
it's all a mirage. You don't understand Trump and his people.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
That is totally absurd. Here he is saying it. Are
you ready for it? This is clip nine.
Speaker 8 (06:25):
And while the Trump administration will try to wave rosy
headlines about the Q two number. Today's GDP number is
in fact a mirage because some ominous numbers lurk under
the hood. Business investment plunged in the second quarter by
three point one percent. The fact that business investment plunged
(06:49):
so starkly is very troubling.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
Oh my god.
Speaker 8 (06:52):
It shows that already businesses are worried about growing their operations,
worried about hiring more workers, worried about rating with their
international partners, and worried in general about the future.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
I'm gonna play it one more time just so you
get it. Okay, do you want to know why? And
this is real. GDP grew above expectations, Hiring beat expectations,
Inflation went down. Real wages are ahead of inflation for
the first time in forty five years. Do you know
why he's quoting a stat that says business investment is down.
It's because in Trump's first quarter as president, we got
(07:27):
a bigger amount of foreign investments than we ever have
in the history of the country. Oh, Trump brought in
about four trillion dollars in capital investments. Okay, this time around,
it's three percent less than that. But you understand, in
both instances, you're talking about trillions of dollars more than
(07:51):
we had at the beginning of the month. Straight clown. Okay,
and here's Tchuck Schumer. This is the greatest thing in
the world, truck Schumer said when Trump shrucked the straight
trucky struck struck. The trade deal is what do you
speak of in eglis? Seriously, I sound like.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
I sound like Joe Biden.
Speaker 4 (08:13):
Up.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Make sure the television they excuse me, make sure you
have the record player on at night.
Speaker 9 (08:18):
The funt I gotta apologize to that man, Chuck Schumer
said on the Senate floor after Trump made the trade
deal with the EU a monumental trade deal.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Okay, I'm gonna play the reactions to that just the same. Okay,
here he is telling you the trade deal is a
ninety billion dollar tax on Americans Clip twelve.
Speaker 8 (08:40):
Over the weekend, Donald Trump announced a new trade deal
with the European Union. It will result in a ninety
billion dollars per year tax hike on American families. When
you raise tariffs, the American families pay for it. Ninety
billion dollar tax on American family in this tariff deal
(09:02):
with the European Union.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
He is so fullish, this guy straight up because you
want to know what we haven't done since Trump imposed tariffs.
We haven't paid more for goods. Okay, So this whole
idea that it was a tax on Americans, we're all
going to feel it. We've brought in a record record
of over fifty billion dollars in tariff revenue since Trump
(09:26):
implemented them. So when Chuck Schumer gets out there, this
is the point I want you to understand. Okay, as
a guy who cares about people, I drove a taxi.
It was really poor. It was really, really, really poor
when my kid was born. Okay, we were banking out
of a shoe box. I know some of you have
heard the story a million times. Okay, you talk about
not having money in the bank. We didn't have a bank. Okay.
We were banking at the Bank of Nike, and we
(09:48):
were keeping cash at a Nike box, hoping to catch
a hot streak and save up to the bank of rebook.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
If you've ever lived that way, and.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
You're responsible for lives beyond your own, and you're in
such a primal fight for your own financial survive day
in and day out, yeah, builds a lot of character.
It's a lot of fun. Looking back on it now,
it's very whimsical and amazing and incredible and your wife
and your kid and you're moving around and all the
fun stuff that we got to do. But the point
is it's really really hard, like really hard, and if
(10:14):
you've ever lived through it, you can never abandon your
connection to it, and you can never take your eye
off of the poor people struggling the way you did.
So when I hear these massive GDP numbers and job
growth and no tax on tips and stuff like that,
I'm thinking of somebody like myself who would have really
benefited from this. Okay, And I know there are people
out there right now that are hearing good economic news
(10:36):
for the country and going not me. I'm not doing
much better, and you might not be yet. But the
bureaucratic boot of regulation is being lifted off the neck
of the business community, which means it is only a
matter of time till your own pace and quality of
life accelerates if you keep on working. Okay, things are
absolutely positively trending in the right direction. I know that
(10:59):
because all the networks that hate Trump have been forced
to admit it. Here's CNN clip fifteen.
Speaker 10 (11:04):
The bottom line is this is the biggest trade deal
in President Trump's effort to effectively reshape the global trading order.
That has been one of his central priorities since taking
office in January. He's been issuing many threats of tariffs,
but they clearly have been working in terms of bringing
other countries' allies and adversaries alike in some cases, to
(11:27):
the negotiating table.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
I mean, think about that. That's CNN. CNN's saying it's working.
CNN is the worst.
Speaker 3 (11:35):
But even they can't lie about it because it's irrefutable.
Here's MSNBC clip sixteen.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
US take and.
Speaker 6 (11:42):
He hits with this deal.
Speaker 5 (11:44):
And what does it say, this outcome say about the
President's ability to negotiate.
Speaker 1 (11:50):
It's incredibly favorable for the United States. And you look
at this, it's been very one sided. I mean, the
US is been making the demands and these other.
Speaker 7 (11:56):
Countries have had to kind of contort and comport themselves
to them.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
I mean about that, Okay, incredibly favorable deal to the
United States of America.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
Do you know how many hits we take? Zero?
Speaker 3 (12:08):
Okay, Trump understood we have all the leverage with the
biggest economy in the world. People need us to sell
their products. They need us a lot more than we
need them. So what he's trying to do is twofold.
One is he's trying to leverage that access by getting
them to pay us more for the privilege of doing
business here. Two, he's incentivizing investment in our country. He's saying, hey,
(12:29):
I know you don't like tariffs, so move some of
the factories back. Okay, when you really think about what
NAFTA did under Bill Clinton, Okay, it killed over five
million factory jobs. I'm not saying we're gonna get every
one of them back, but show a hands. If you're
listening in a car right now, how many of you
just drove through a town that used to have a
factory in a booming downtown and now has a Walmart
(12:50):
and a Cracker barrel next to a highway. Shout out
to Walmart and Cracker Barrell. I love them both. I mean,
I fit in just fine there. Those are my people.
But I'm telling you you might have had a thriving downtown,
you might have had a different quality of life before
they took all of that American manufacturing and exported it overseas.
And when everybody says Oh, you know it's gone. You
can't wave a wand and bring it back. Do you
remember when Obama was saying all that stuff. It's because
(13:12):
he didn't have the balls to use the leverage we
have as the world's biggest economy.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
That's the one and I really mean this.
Speaker 3 (13:19):
The biggest attribute of having people from the private sector
running the government right now is they're running it like
a business instead of running it like a government. A
government traditionally uses taxpayers as a piggybank for whatever special
interests they'd like to pursue with their own agenda.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
That's just how white folks will do you and that's
always been it.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
Run on one thing, do another, outsource stuff to this
slush fund or that slush fund. Hey, everybody's starving in Africa.
We got to send the money. And the rest of
us are like, yeah, we got to send the money.
We're gonna starting in Africa. But you know what the
clearance rate is on usaid when it comes to foreign aid,
ninety cents on every dollar we send to Africa for food,
ninety cents of every dollar never makes it outside of Washington,
(14:01):
So they get about ten percent of what we're actually
committing to things like that, which is actually a high
clearance rate. If you ask the people who donated the
California's fire relief fund under Gavin Newsom, like people should
be in jail for that. They raised one hundred million
dollars at the charity event, and no homeowner has gotten
any relief because the money was filtered through Democrat Get
out the Vote organizations in California, a state that's like
(14:24):
nine hundred and sixty two percent liberal, give or take
a few counties where they're listening to us on KSRO
right now. But the point is it's all a scam,
and Trump has the balls to call it out for
what it is. And the reason the economy is thriving
is for the first time in our life, we have
a president that is putting America first and the American
(14:45):
laborer is benefiting.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
And yes, Chuck Schumer can go on TV and ah,
this is bad. It's a mirage.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
You don't understand because his job is not to make
your life better.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
His job is to hope it gets worse.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
So you'll give Democrats another shot at running the country. Right, Okay,
But does anybody looking around right now at all the
destruction they did, driving grocery prices up thirty percent, inflation
to a forty year high, letting twenty one million people
into the country, which resulted in a three hundred percent
spot of spike, three hundred percent fentanyl poisoning deaths. Bumbling
(15:16):
is in the brink at two world wars and telling
us men can have babies. Is anybody sitting around right
now going jay, if only those people could.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Be in charge again?
Speaker 2 (15:25):
And you know the answer, These funks across the America
with Jimmy Saylor.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
Here's one of those, like, oh girl, it is Fox
across America with the main man, Jimmy. Phyla Kennedy's coming up,
Paula Scanlon's going to be here, and we're also going
to talk to Katrina Campins about the Sydney sweeneyad because
people are all in a huff about cleavage.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
That's the whole friggin thing.
Speaker 6 (15:50):
Hubba hubba.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
I know, right, people, I'm not. Yeah, That's why I
guess Lincoln's reaction.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
But the point is, as we have this conversation, the
one thing that I keep coming back to over and
over and over again is the two political parties.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
If you look at them as just parties.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
Forget politics, and not a Democrat party, not a Republican party,
just a party. It reminds me of an old episode
of the Office. Have you ever seen The Office when
they have competing Christmas parties, So you've got like a
Michael Scott party, no one's going to nobody cares. Then
the other guys are having like the cool fun party
and everything like that. That is the Democrats and the
Republicans right now. The Republican Office party is a lot
(16:29):
more fun. They've got jokes, they've got big boobs. Women
feel good about themselves. Women feel safe in this environment
because they're not being told that men are allowed to
get naked in their women's room. They're not losing out
on scholarships and awards and medals and trophies because they're
being forced to compete against biological males on behalf of
(16:50):
an ideology.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
That purports to care and protect women.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
Okay, the Democratic Party, if you looked at it as
a party, is erasing women. They're saying their ability, which
is unique to them to give birth, is not their own.
It's not something women have a monopoly on because men
supposedly can also give birth. I mean you know that,
(17:17):
and I know that. But that's politics in a nutshell
right now. One side is setting all kinds of historic
trade deals. They've shut down the border. They've cut your taxes,
and yes, they've cut taxes on tips. So at the
Republican Party, not only are you having more fun, but
the strippers are happier too. Meanwhile, over in the Democratic
(17:43):
Office Party, there's plenty of women, but for some reason,
they all have a bigger Adams Apple than you. Politics
twenty twenty five, Kennedy's coming by to extol on the
virtues of this expert analysis. After this, we are rocking
(18:05):
hard on Fox across America with Jimmy Fallow.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
We've been a little high brow today. We've been talking
about boobies for the past hour and a half.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
Uh and I happen to know that two fellas in
the control room right now have thrown a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
At them over the years, paying in cash to quote.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
L Rushbell joining us now an expert on all things
Booby's cash, all of it. The k Train, host of
the Kennedy Saves the World podcast. Kennedy is up on
the main stage.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
Thank you, jim I love a strip club voice.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Do you know strip club DJ Litle Together, you're a
little green scenery rockets. Take her in the back, who
knows what will happen?
Speaker 1 (18:45):
That was the room. People listen.
Speaker 6 (18:46):
There's bouncers and cameras.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
People listening up in Utica WYBX, we've been there. We
did we did a stand up comedy there. They used
to have a strip club called Peepers. And when I
was a senior in high school, we were there for
a base bowl tournament and Peepers let us write in
like with a library card.
Speaker 5 (19:04):
Well you know, I'm sure uh huh, based on your
high school several of those singers were probably twenty five.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
And they were to be fair, just visiting their classmates
on stage.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
But the Shrimp Club DJ. Peeper is a legend.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
And I had never been a shrip club before, so
you would imagine this carries a lot of sway with
a young boy. Take her in the back for a
lep dance. Who knows what might happen? And we're like,
whoa all ride?
Speaker 1 (19:30):
You know what happened?
Speaker 6 (19:30):
You'd probably my girlfriend?
Speaker 2 (19:33):
What happened?
Speaker 3 (19:34):
Do you remember the old Chris Rock But there's no
sex in the champagne room, No matter what a stripper
might tell you.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
There is no sex in the champagne room.
Speaker 5 (19:42):
But I don't doubt when John Stark's ratted out his
former teammates. Yeah, and I was like, I was at
a strip club with Padrick Ewing and I saw some
very untoward things happening with a young lady's mouth.
Speaker 3 (19:55):
And that's why the Knicks never won a title, right
because John Starks didn't understand the value you of going
after loose balls.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Got everybody gotta go prop it up.
Speaker 5 (20:06):
If only they could have employed some of those women
from Flashdancers.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
Bang.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
So we're talking about women in the highest intellectual sense.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
Of the term.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
Indeed, uh, I always say back in the cancel culture era,
I used to call it a war on fund meaning
they were they were basically policing sources of joy for
sources of grievance. You know, they'd go to a comedy
shoom be like is this joke punching up or punching down?
Speaker 1 (20:31):
Who cares? Am I laughing? Yeah, it doesn't matter, no
punch down, go ahead. And I think the whole you.
Speaker 3 (20:36):
Throw your back out, amen, And I think the hold ups,
the holdouts on the Sydney sweeney argument, the crazy white
women in suber Rus or whoever they are, are operating
under an old business model that you could police a
source of joy for a source of grievance, and for
a while maybe hold sway on social media because people
would get behind your social pressure campaign, regardless of whether
(20:57):
it was more to any fact. I mean, because I
think wherever you take your analysis, I think we would agree.
Speaker 6 (21:02):
Oh it is Wednesday, it is time for my your analysis.
Speaker 8 (21:04):
Thank you, Jim.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
But I think we would agree that drawing a correlation
between killing six million people and a chick in jeans
with hoodies is intellectually disqualifying.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
Yeah, okay, you start there as if I love that
Sydney Sweeney somehow now is a Nazi propagandists.
Speaker 6 (21:22):
It's like, never mind.
Speaker 5 (21:24):
The hordes of people who've taken over Columbia and Harvard
and UPenn and UCLA, and these killed the Jews rallies.
Now all of a sudden, babes sprouted some anti Nazi sensibilities,
even though there's spray paint all over these campuses. Hitler
was right, but now it's like they're jealous of Sidney Sweeney.
(21:45):
So they're like, oh my God, Like, this is so freaky.
This is obviously a propaganda campaign, and it's really freaking
me out.
Speaker 6 (21:55):
It's like, that is such a historical stretch.
Speaker 5 (21:58):
Ye, and for the professor to go on CNN and
be like, well, actually, this is all the Jennux program
started in the United States from nineteen.
Speaker 6 (22:06):
Hundred to nineteen forty. But I see a lot of parallels.
Speaker 5 (22:09):
It's like, what between cleavage and a classic car and
the extermination of six six million was just a starting.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Point for she was, to be clear, at a Shelby GT.
Five hundred, which is not a Volkswagon if you wanted
to make the parallel.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Since we're having this conversation.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
Those cups were not filled by crupps.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
Kennedy is in studio. We're having a grown up talk
about Sidney Sweet. Somebody had to. It's like no one
in the media.
Speaker 5 (22:37):
Had the gust that telling to young gen zers, thank you,
they're not selling to constipated, frigid millennials. You already sound
in this debate, they already sound incredibly old. Yes, you know,
it's like gen xers and young gen zers have so
much in common because like everything that we liked is
now retro. I don't care if they feel like they
discovered it. The important thing is they want to have fun. Yeah,
(23:00):
they don't want to be lectured to. They don't want
to be told that. You know, there's not enough body
positivity here, and it's like a lot of dudes pitching
pup tents going.
Speaker 6 (23:09):
I'm pretty positive about it.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
I tuned it earlier.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
I've been trying to get my son's take, but he
hasn't come out of the bathroom since the ad dropped.
Speaker 5 (23:17):
Yeah, there was this There was this pudgy face TikToker.
Speaker 6 (23:21):
Who was like, I really, I'm so disturbed by this.
Speaker 5 (23:25):
It's like, okay, listen, they you have the ugliest septim
ring ever. You are disturbed because no one is ever
going to run anything up the flagpole thinking about you.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Hard truth, hard truth. Maybe not hard, but truth. Kennedy's here.
So I was I was going to play one of
those clips for you, because what I find funny is
there's this other argument being made just the same.
Speaker 1 (23:49):
This happened to me today. I was getting ready to
do newsroom and someone made.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
A point.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
Dropped not at all.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
Friend, is nobody talks to me in this jacket, even
my son.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
I got no respect to.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
Lincoln Kle on stage and just went in on my
jacket straight up. He goes, apparently nobody told my dad
Pride Month was over, and he goes, but I can't
make fun of him because he pays my grocery bills.
But that's like the worst because he's also saying, like
you're beneath beneath contempt. Yes, anyway, I was just trying
to tell you that a head of newsroom today someone
(24:25):
made a point. I don't want to out the staff
or she's delightful, but she said, but what do you
say to this argument. I'm hearing a lot that Sidney
Sweeney being as gorgeous as she is is unfair to
women because they're saying you've got to look like that
to be in a commercial. I'm like, first of all,
they're not saying that they're just using this specific person
in this specific commercial. There are people of all shapes inside.
Aleena Dunham has a show coming out.
Speaker 6 (24:47):
You know, the right, and it's awful.
Speaker 3 (24:49):
It's the worst thing you've ever seen. But the point
is that commercials were not doing this as a means
of saying to everyone consuming them, this is the only
way to live your life. And people who were born into,
you know, certain attributes that were beyond the norm, we
used to just celebrate them for that ability. Meaning if
you take hot chicks out of commercials because we're not
(25:10):
all that hot, then how do we justify letting people
sing knowing that most karaoke performances yet aren't on that level. Yeah,
you know, hey, hey, that's enough out of you, Whitney Houston.
Maybe that's wh why Bobby gave her crack. He was
telling you wanted to be more inclusive. He's act she
sings too good. We gotta start killing off the good.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Singers too much. Yeah, I mean, think.
Speaker 6 (25:29):
About the level the playing field.
Speaker 5 (25:30):
But it's that mentality that you have to level the
playing field. That's like, you know, asking someone who just
broke a hip to join the Rockheads dance line at
Radio City Music Hall.
Speaker 6 (25:40):
It's no.
Speaker 5 (25:41):
You want to see ideals because ideals are aspirational.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Thank you, That's what I said. It was aspirational.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
That's the point that it's like when Victoria's Secret used
to have super model like they're literally called supermodels. We
acknowledged as a people that some people were born into
a level of aesthetic prosperity that was unique to them,
and we were just like, isn't that something, you know,
no different than a guy who's a baseball five hundred
feet or a.
Speaker 5 (26:06):
Person an artist who paints an incredible painting. Yeah, Hunter Biden.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
The idea though, it is so funny.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
We took about the corruption and stuff like that because
so much of it happens in plain sight. Gaud's getting
a half a million of painting, yes, and now obviously
nothing and we don't draw a parallel between this being
some type of backdoor pay for play situation.
Speaker 6 (26:26):
Yeah, well, if there was a market for it, why
isn't there still a market?
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Fl thank you?
Speaker 6 (26:31):
It's inflation's coming down.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
It's like it's basically the Clinton Foundation with a paint brush. Yeah,
because it was the same thing, gazillions of dollars. They're like, oh,
she's out of politics. The number you have reached is
not in service. All of a sudden, the donation line
went right down. Yeah, Kennedy's in the studio and the
other thing and this is bonkers, and I've heard this
side of it just the same is we're in a
(26:52):
current news cycle where a biological man is the face
of Alta Cosmetics, and that's a modeling opportunity that would
traditionally go to A And if you were a female model,
being the face of Alta would be a really big
gig to.
Speaker 6 (27:04):
Get too aggrieved.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Yeah, but think about that.
Speaker 3 (27:07):
So, like, the modern feminist movement is actually not protecting
women in any way.
Speaker 5 (27:12):
No, it just it wants to tear women down, absolutely,
And that's so much of these feminists. And I was
reading the Washington Post there was a column between their
two fashion columnists, and you know, one of them was like, well,
I just worry that this campaign is very regressive. And
it's like, yes, because progressive loses like that is not
(27:32):
an attractive philosophy for younger people, and regressive for them
means oh we can have fun again. Yeah for us,
I know, we saved fun.
Speaker 6 (27:42):
As a generation.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
Straight up.
Speaker 6 (27:44):
You guys tried to wreck it forever, and we're not
going to let you.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
Straight up.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
And that's the point is when you start to become
like the grievance minded whole monitors of society, you're introducing
a lot of conflict in inconsequential areas, meaning this ad
would come and go.
Speaker 5 (28:01):
I mean, you know, oh, they've given it life, they've
given it so much oxygen and American Eagle. They're not
gonna reap the benefits of it right now. They're not
gonna read the benefits until these actual genes are in
stores because people will hordes of people will rush to.
Speaker 3 (28:18):
Find them show their support for the ideological cause.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
So it's like their stock prices.
Speaker 6 (28:22):
Up there, and they also want to look that good.
Speaker 3 (28:24):
Yeah, and that again was aspirational. That was the point
of the Victoria's Secrets lingerie show before they turned it
into a series of before models and there's nothing wrong, my.
Speaker 6 (28:33):
God so much.
Speaker 5 (28:34):
Ollie London had a hysterical contrast. There was a Calvin
Klein print ad from a three years ago, the Yeah,
the man in the in the beige sports broad just
these corpulent, dowey, unattractive people and the woman, you know,
she's all like chubby, but not in the good way,
not like the Cardi b you know, it's like hips
(28:57):
don't lie kind of way.
Speaker 6 (28:58):
It was like, no, it's like painfully truthful that these.
Speaker 5 (29:02):
Are unattractive people who have given up on their fitness.
And it's like that wasn't selling, like you used to have.
Kate Mawson, Marky Mark Yeah, in their calvins and that
was really hot and that you know, it's like people
are trying to get back to fun.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Yeah, we went from heroin chic to women who looked
like the iron chic.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
Was not supposed to be the pretty I have a beard.
If you don't want to sleep money positivity.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
If you don't want to sleep with a bearded man
in a dress, you're a transphobe.
Speaker 6 (29:34):
Take me to prom.
Speaker 3 (29:37):
But they did that, and it was always a tyranny
of the minority. But what was really of great consequence
is the fact this is where Elon buying Twitter, though,
has really helped society in a weird way. It loosened
up the lanes of free speech because other big tech
companies so that that's where the market was going, and
stopped responding to the heavy handed government censorship efforts that
(29:57):
were being made. Like Fate you could tweet about you
could put just about politics again on Facebook. You weren't
really able to do that and be in the algorithm
a year ago.
Speaker 5 (30:05):
But actually we find these things to be offensive. Yeah,
therefore we have to deep platform people and make their
post down.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
I mean, really think about it.
Speaker 3 (30:13):
When the media was able to actually bury the Hunter
Biden laptop story. Okay, you might have had a different
electoral outcome if everybody was able to speak freely about
it for the last three weeks running up to the election.
They killed it on October twentieth. Yeah, and it was
able to keep them. Yeah, they had the post did
what they did, and they were like hell no, you know.
So that's where you know, like the Jack Dorsey owned
(30:34):
Twitter was kind of they were throttling posts that didn't
agree with the prevailing or preferred narrative. So you could
make these statements. It wasn't like you were going to
be deep platform, but no one was going to see them.
And when they were amplifying things that were like we
referred to earlier the Calvin Klein underwear campaign and they
had seven hundred million likes, Yes this is beauty and
(30:54):
be like, I guess this is beauty now.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
And we're like, actually, the funny thing about that.
Speaker 3 (31:01):
So I feel like the fact that you know, they're
calling this, oh, it's a backlash, but it's not actually
a backlash, Like.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Society is firmly on the side of the boobs here.
Speaker 6 (31:10):
Yeah, it's it's a reset, yes, and that's what we're watching.
Speaker 5 (31:13):
And they were like, well, maybe if we put real
women with real curves in our advertisements.
Speaker 6 (31:20):
People.
Speaker 5 (31:21):
By the end, I remember looking at like Lululemon and
their sports bras and it's just like corpual and women
see that enough when they go into fitting rooms.
Speaker 6 (31:30):
It's like, no, I.
Speaker 5 (31:31):
Want to see something that I want to look like eventually. Yeah,
not when I gained six hundred pounds, when I take
three months of straight pilates spash.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
No, think about that. How many people listen are gonna know?
I have You probably have to.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
Sometimes you actually buy an outfit and go, I'm going
to use this as my motivation and get into shape.
I'm gonna wear I'm gonna make it so this I
can wear this. Yes, okay, imagine how much you're defeating
people's sense of purpose and determination but being actually like,
it's the letting yourself.
Speaker 6 (32:01):
I'm gonna buy a size eighteen.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
I'm gonna buy this once I gained the thirty five.
That's what they were doing.
Speaker 6 (32:08):
I'm swimming in it now.
Speaker 5 (32:09):
But man, I swear to God, when i'm pretty again,
after strapping a feedback to my face till after Christmas.
Speaker 4 (32:17):
Whoo.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
They broke the compass, that's the point.
Speaker 3 (32:20):
And no one was buying, like meaning they broke the compass,
but no one was following them through the woods.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
They're like no, not fine, like g got's a lot
of us not okay. And think about it.
Speaker 3 (32:27):
You know this before bud Light did what they did okay,
And this is essentially the opposite of that. This is
what bud Light used to be. Bud Light was always
hot chicks and jokes. Remember the cores Light. Here's the
football and twins that whole commercial.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
Do you remember the Ciindy Crawford commercial.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
Yes, it's the greatest pepsi commercial of all but greatest
Super Bowl commercial ball time, nineteen ninety two. Yes, she
pulls up at a ferrari. For those of you who
haven't seen it, I'll talk slower. Cindy Crawford pulls up
at a Ferrari in like one hundred degree day, gets
out in one of those dirt parking lot gas stations
where the bell rings ding ding.
Speaker 1 (32:56):
She goes over to the pepsi machine.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
It's a new can, pulls it out and wipes it
off her forehead, wipes off her chest and they cut
to little boys who go, man, that's a great looking
PEPSI can and they're so great a Peyton switch and
we're like, oh, the hottest girl in the world. Hot
chicks in humor. Okay, we run on that as a country. Yes,
and this campaign is the antithesis of everything that makes
(33:20):
us who we are. And is it not insane to
think that maybe our grandparents are great grandparents literally are
the ones who defeated the Nazis so their descendants could
be called Nazis because we like cleavage. This is the
dumbest time there has ever been to be alive.
Speaker 1 (33:36):
Yeah, it's offensive. Thank you.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
Kennedy is sticking around for one more segment because the
bars aren't open yet. Back after this, this thing is
gonna become God gainst you and when the Son.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
Of Man comes. You're listening to Fucks Across the Little.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
Girl and his Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayler. We're
getting some Bonus Kennedy on Wednesday. Bonus Can I love that?
Speaker 1 (33:58):
Though?
Speaker 3 (33:59):
You know what I'm saying, I do too, little Bonus
Kennedy and we were chatting about Sydney Sweeney and got
a New York City mayor's race mom Donnie back in
the country today.
Speaker 5 (34:07):
Yeah, after being in a very very poor country in
his family's lavish compound, which is a great metaphor for
what's going to happen in New York City, Like he'll
be living in Gracie mansion surrounded by armed security twenty
four hours a day, and the rest of the city
will crumble into an absolute hellhole.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
Absolute hell whole.
Speaker 3 (34:27):
And the guy who wanted to defund the police, as
you know, had plenty of armed protection. And as a
guy who famously he caught a lot of heat, we
had this horrible shooting this week. He's obviously on record
is saying we don't need an investigation to know the
NYPD is racist, anti queer and a threat to society.
Speaker 5 (34:44):
Yes, if there's no queer liberation, there should not be
an NYPD.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Yeah, I made imagine that.
Speaker 6 (34:48):
What does that mean?
Speaker 1 (34:49):
What is queer liberation?
Speaker 10 (34:50):
Ye?
Speaker 1 (34:50):
What does it actually mean? Has anyone been to the
Pride parade? Yes, like I've made this.
Speaker 6 (34:54):
They don't let cops gay cops march in the provice.
Speaker 3 (34:57):
Now imagine that if you can tell the cops whether
they're allowed to come to your shin dig you're as
liberated as liberation's gonna get you. Okay, folks listening around
the world, if you throw a pride parade in Iran,
the cops are coming.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
They're coming right away. They're coming, and.
Speaker 6 (35:13):
They're not coming to wave flag for the first.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
God gets spanked on the first float. The cops are coming.
It's gonna be a very short parade. It's gonna end
in a fire pit, my god. Okay, but by the way.
Speaker 5 (35:25):
Yeah, where they'll throw you off a building to land
in the fire pit.
Speaker 3 (35:29):
It is literally going to become the scene in Pee
Wee's Big Adventure. I say, we drown them, and then
we hang them, and then we kill them.
Speaker 1 (35:36):
It's gonna be I say, we love them.
Speaker 3 (35:39):
No shout out to the K train back in the
next hour. Kennedy will be saving the world every day
until then. Check out our pod podcast, the podcast.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Ladies and Gentlemen, I stand. This has been a podcast
asked from wo R